= 
COTTON SEED 
D&PL-FOX, Registered Breeder Stock. 
Higher yield. Fast fruiting. 10 days earlier. More 
can be harvested at the first picking. Can start 
picking before the price of cotton picking ad- 
vances and finish before bad weather, getting 
better grade and price. Bolls are rounder and 
easier picked by hand or machine. Fiber is 
thicker. Yarn appearance is superior. High spin- 
ning qualities. Better for mechanical picking as 
it does not grow rank. When its small, strong, 
compact well jointed stalks are heavily loaded 
with bolls it stands upright. Defoliates naturally 
and makes little second growth. It is easier to 
clean trash out of its thicker, better matured fiber, 
producing a better grade, better appearing yarn 
and less waste. Fox fruits low, so plant it thick, 
forcing it to fruit higher. 
Fox has made highest yields at many experiment 
stations. It outyielded all varieties in the Enfield, 
N. C., test, making 566 Ibs. of lint per acre, 38.9% 
lint and 1 1/16 inch staple. Coker 100 Wilt had 
the same staple and 37.2% lint. Fox made the 
highest average yield of 20 varieties in three 
North Alabama tests, 513 Ibs. of lint per acre, 
36.3% lint, 1 1/16 inch staple. Coker 100 Wilt, 
BFS yielded 447 lbs. 34.8% lint, 1 3/32 inch 
staple. In 11 Central Alabama tests Fox averaged 
524 lbs. lint, 38.1%; Deltapine 15, 500 lbs., 
41.1%; Coker 100 Wilt, 491 Ibs., 36.5% lint. 
DELTAPINE 15. Breeder Registered. 
Medium early, high yield. Best for non-wilt soils. 
Good fiber, spinning quality and yarn appearance; 
1-1/16-inch staple. Medium large bolls. Cotton 
fluffs out well. Storm resistant yet easily picked 
by hand or machine. Distinguished by its pro- 
ductiveness, high gin turnout, 41%, excellent 
staple and ability to produce a crop under adverse 
soil and weather conditions. Developed by 35 
years breeding by one of the world’s foremost 
breeders on the D&PL farms, which grow 10,047 
acres of cotton, averaging 704 Ibs. of lint per 
acre. 
It is by far the most popular variety. 1/3 to V4 
of all cotton in the U. S. is Deltapine. It should 
remain popular as it persists longer, has higher 
turnout and usually slightly longer staple and 
stronger yarn. It is the easiest and fastest cotton 
to gin, requiring less power. 
It made 2,240 Ibs. per acre in the Va. test, with 
1-3/32 inch staple. Fox made 2,141 Ibs. with 
1-1/16 inch staple. Coker 100 Wilt made 1,593 
Ibs. with 1-1/16 inch staple. 
COKER 100 WILT, Blue Tag Certified. 
Delinted. Grown from Breeder Foundation seed 
in Cleveland Co., N. C. in a one variety com- 
munity. Best cotton for wilt resistant soils. Widely 
adapted. 1-1/16 inch. Extra early. High yield. 
Easily picked by hand or machine. Superior 
spinning. Va., N. C., S. C. and Ga. recommend it. 
The most popular cotton in the Southeast. 
The result of 20 years’ testing on wilt-infested 
soil of thousands of plants, selecting for wilt re- 
sistance, yield, staple, picking quality, storm resis- 
tance, fiber strength and spinning quality. It has 
erect plants, well-spaced branches, and thin 
foliage. Leaves shed as cotton matures. Bolls are 
round, slightly pointed, 68 per lb. Bolls ripen 
uniformly, open extremely wide, fluff beautifully, 
yet storm resistant. Maintains a high grade during | 
adverse seasons. Gins out 37%. It has won most 
of the recent state and local cotton contests. J. H. 
Neeley, Chester, S. C., holds the record of 8,275 
lbs. of lint on 5 acres. 
Wood’s Seed Cotton grown at the top of the 
Cotton Belt, matures earlier, beating the boll 
weevil, making bumper crops of top quality 
lint. It is picked early when dry to prevent 
spoiling and insure good germination. Cere- 
san treated to protect seedlings from disease and 
cold damp weather, 25% better stands, more 
vigorous, quicker growth, earlier maturity, 
higher yields. 
Delinted Seed hastens germination and 
growth, in dry weather. Mechanically delinted 
requires 20 to 25 lbs. per acre; Acid delinted, 
10 Ibs. per acre; ordinary seed takes 35 Ibs. 
per acre. 
CROTALARIA 
Good summer green manure crop, twice as much 
leafy growth and root nodules as cow peas, 15 
to 20 tons per acre. When turned under the 
nitrogen is worth $40.00 per acre, the humus 
prevents erosion, holds water in sandy soil and 
opens up heavy soil. Yields of following crops 
are doubled. Not eaten by livestock or insect 
pests. Starves nematodes out of the soil. 
Smothers out summer weeds; thrives on any 
soil; requires no lime or fertilizer. Early cultiva- 
tion pays. From corn planting time to Jal, WS, 
broadcast 20 Ibs. scarified seed per acre or 8 Ibs. 
in 3-ft. rows. Cover 1/2 inches and roll. Use 
Arasan and Inoculant 5. 
LATE CROTALARIA SPECTABILIS 
7 ft. tall. Yields green manure, equal to 800 lbs. 
nitrate of soda per acre. Stalks pithy, easily 
plowed under, decay readily. Thrives on all soils. 
GIANT STRIATA CROTALARIA 
Grows rapidly. When turned under the green 
manure and nitrogen gathered by its roots in- 
crease yields of corn and other crops enormously. 
IMPROVED VALENCIA has large pods, each filled with 3 or 4 
big red nuts with the most delicious flavor. Best for home use. 
Brings a premium on the market. High shelling percent. 
PEANUTS 
Grown from pedigreed seed, heavily recleaned, 
hand picked, high germination, free of pops. Not 
shelled, as machine shelling breaks the seed 
coat, causing poor stands. Shell and pick by hand. 
2 ounces Arasan, page 66, treats 100 Ibs. shelled 
nuts; increases stands 1/3. Use Wood's Inocula: 
tion 5. Plant in May or early June, 12 inches 
deep, 1 inch if soil is moist. Plant closer on 
poorer soils. Use 500 Ibs. 0-12-12 fertilizer per 
acre. On Jumbos use 300 Ibs. gypsum. Cultivate 
shallow and often until nuts start. Dust 3 times 
with fine sulphurs at 2-week intervals ending Aug. 
14 to control flea hoppers. To harvest loosen roots 
with a plow, pull vines up, let nuts dry, stack 
around a stake, nuts inward. Peanuts will grow 
on any soil, light sandy soils produce the best. 
The vines are superior to alfalfa in fat, nearly 
equal in protein and feed livestock all winter 
and spring. Nuts left in the ground fatten hogs 
and give pork a superior flavor. 
LARGE VIRGINIA JUMBO RUNNER 
Largest Nuts. Higher Yield, Grade and Value. 
155 days. 42% oil. Pure strain with higher yield, 
larger, more uniform pod and kernel. It makes 
the highest per cent of extra large kernels for 
high grade salted nuts and candy. Pods are big 
and thick with very little dent around the center. 
Gets best prices, sold unhulled for roasting. It 
shells out 68% meat. Best adapted to light sandy 
soils, high in calcium. Plant in early May, 45 Ibs. 
of shelled seed per acre (85 Ibs. unhulled), 10 to 
16 inches apart in 30 to 40-inch rows. 
IMPROVED VALENCIA BUNCH 
Big red nuts. Best for average Soils where 
other large peanuts yield many pops. 140 days. 
A 30-lb. bushel shells out 22 Ibs. of nuts. Does 
well farther west and north than any other large 
varieties, or after early truck crops in the South. 
Plant 40 Ibs. shelled nuts per acre (60 Ibs. un- 
shelled) 8 to 10 inches apart in 21/2 to 3 ft. rows. 
WHITE SPANISH BUNCH PEANUTS 
Earliest maturing. Highest oil content, 50%. Best 
for crushing, heavy soils or where large varieties 
fail. 135 days. 2 small white nuts entirely fill 
each pod. Shells out 75%. Superior sweetness 
and flavor. Very few pops, so often found in 
large varieties. Easier to grow and harvest. Nuts 
cling firmly to the roots and are easily cured. 
Plant 30 Ibs. shelled nuts per acre (45 lbs. un- 
shelled), 6 to 12 inches apart in 2 to 2/2 ft. rows. 
TENNESSEE RED BUNCH 
142 days. Long pods packed with 3 to 4 red nuts 
with mild sweet flavor. Productive on heavy and 
most all soils. High oil content and shelling per. 
cent. Brings a premium for roast- 
ing. Plant 40 Ibs. shelled nuts per 
acre (60 lbs. unshelled) 6 to 8 inches 
apart in 27 to 33 inch rows. 
VELVET BEANS 
Nutritious fall and winter grazing 
or soil improvement crop. Vines, 
leaves and pods remain palatable 
all winter. Plant 20 lbs. per acre 
with corn. After corn is harvested 
turn cattle or hogs in to graze. 
100-DAY SPECKLED, earliest, best 
for the upper South. Makes won- 
drous growth of vines for grazing 
and finishing cattle. A fine 
soil improver. 59 
